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![]() "The Ghost In The Machine" wrote in message ... In sci.physics, Raziel wrote on Fri, 15 Aug 2003 10:30:09 -0700 : "The Ghost In The Machine" wrote in message news ![]() In sci.physics, Archimedes Plutonium wrote on Thu, 14 Aug 2003 12:09:45 -0500 : [snip for brevity] But there is not enough time, and so approx 75% of Mercury will end up in the center of the Sun and be vaporized in the center. And....? Star Trek: Generations had the rather fanciful notion of missiles instantly shrinking a star into a white dwarf. Your idea is just about as ridiculous. what? you don't believe in TriLithium? Haven't seen it; can't say I believe in it. :-) I can't say I've seen lithium either but at least I have some hard evidence of its existence. If nothing else, "spodumene" is just too weird a word to make up... :-) http://www.webelements.com/webelemen...xt/Li/key.html Even were the missiles equipped with a warp drive motor to somehow get the Sun to shrink instantly once launched, it would still take about 8 minutes to see the effect. Nor is it clear that merely shrinking the Sun would reduce or increase its gravitational pull on that weirdish "thread" (I can't think of the actual name right now, but it involved Whoopi Goldberg :-) ), as the mass is the same. This is a not-so-subtle point that was apparently lost on the screenwriters. :-) yes, their "physics" advisers often blow it. I remember a TNG episode where they reported the average temperature of a planet as -300 Celcius. I thought that was rather interesting. Raz |
#53
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![]() "Archimedes Plutonium" wrote in message ... (formerly)" wrote: Dear Archimedes Plutonium: "Archimedes Plutonium" wrote in message ... ... If the idea that the most electronegative element-- flourine would interfer with hydrogen and stall it from fusing properly that the temperature can be lowered steadily causing more loss of fusion. What part of "plasma" do you not understand? How many electrons do you think either hydrogen or fluorine nucleii retain at 25 million degrees, at the core, where fusion takes place? Fusion is not occurring where electronegativity even factors in... David A. Smith I am not so sure that all chemistry is insignificant in plasma physics. then you know very little about plasma physics, particularly at the temperatures we are talking about here. One test would be to detonate a fusion bomb that is containing iodine, fluorine and see if it is inconsequental. how, exactly, do you think that would test anything? Raz |
#54
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"Raziel" writes:
"The Ghost In The Machine" wrote in message ... In sci.physics, Raziel wrote on Fri, 15 Aug 2003 10:30:09 -0700 : "The Ghost In The Machine" wrote in message news ![]() wrote on Thu, 14 Aug 2003 12:09:45 -0500 : [...] Even were the missiles equipped with a warp drive motor to somehow get the Sun to shrink instantly once launched, it would still take about 8 minutes to see the effect. Nor is it clear that merely shrinking the Sun would reduce or increase its gravitational pull on that weirdish "thread" (I can't think of the actual name right now, but it involved Whoopi Goldberg :-) ), as the mass is the same. This is a not-so-subtle point that was apparently lost on the screenwriters. :-) yes, their "physics" advisers often blow it. I remember a TNG episode where they reported the average temperature of a planet as -300 Celcius. I thought that was rather interesting. Their "physics" advisors know _very_ little physics, since they happened to be the Staff Artist Rick Sternbach, and the Graphics Designer Mike Okuda. Okuda and Sternbach were approached to create ST:TNG's technobabble because in their other careers Science Fiction Magazine Illustrators, they had at least _read_ some science fiction in order to know what they should paint, and therefore knew some of the "jargon." _None_ of the staff scriptwriters were science fiction fans, and several of them actually _resented_ the fact that they had been assigned to an SF show, as they considered that genre to be "beneath" them... -- Gordon D. Pusch perl -e '$_ = \n"; s/NO\.//; s/SPAM\.//; print;' |
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In sci.physics, Raziel
wrote on Mon, 18 Aug 2003 10:53:15 -0700 : "The Ghost In The Machine" wrote in message ... [snip for brevity -- discussing _Star Trek: Generations_] Even were the missiles equipped with a warp drive motor to somehow get the Sun to shrink instantly once launched, it would still take about 8 minutes to see the effect. Nor is it clear that merely shrinking the Sun would reduce or increase its gravitational pull on that weirdish "thread" (I can't think of the actual name right now, but it involved Whoopi Goldberg :-) ), as the mass is the same. This is a not-so-subtle point that was apparently lost on the screenwriters. :-) yes, their "physics" advisers often blow it. I remember a TNG episode where they reported the average temperature of a planet as -300 Celcius. I thought that was rather interesting. This must have been the Extra Cold Universe Option. :-) Raz -- #191, -- could be worse; there was also the episodes involving a gigantic single-celled amoeba It's still legal to go .sigless. |
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